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Thursday Ribbon Cutting at Affordable Senior Housing Project in Rye

There will be a ribbon cutting at Vienna Senior Housing at 10:30am on Thursday, March 29th, 2018 with local officials including Westchester County Executive and Rye resident George Latimer and the New York State Homes and Community Renewal (HCR) Commissioner.

The forty one rental apartments at 250 Theodore Fremd Avenue are part of an agreement with the federal government.

In a note to local press and officials last week, former Rye Mayor Doug French said "“One of the proudest accomplishments of my administration was this project and getting affordable housing units here in Rye dedicated for seniors. It took a team effort working with the County Executive Office, Federal Monitor, Planning Departments, Developer and Legislators along with City Staff and State Officials to get the units allocated for seniors and to begin the planning and approval process. To see the project come to completion is very rewarding and will have a lasting impact on the community.”

According the the county web site, there are twenty‐eight (28) one bedroom and twelve (12) two bedroom apartments plus an apartment for the building superintendent:

"The one bedroom apartment is +/‐ 800 sq.ft.; the two bedroom, +/‐930 sq.ft. Kitchens are fully equipped with refrigerator, stove/oven, dishwasher and microwave. Heating is hot water baseboard. Cooking is electric. A/C units will be provided by the owner. Common laundry facilities are located on each floor. A community room and patio will be on the third floor; lobby, mailroom and management office on the first floor. There will be 64 on‐site parking spaces."

In order to qualify for the apartments, household income must be at or below 50 percent and up to 60 percent area median income for Westchester County.

One bedrooms rent for between $995 and $1,204 / month and two bedrooms rent for between $1,198 and $1,449 / month. The housing was allocated by lottery.

According to LoHud.com, "The residences are part of Westchester County’s effort to add hundreds of affordable-housing units spread across affluent communities, as part of a 2009 settlement of a federal lawsuit brought by the Anti-Discrimination Center of Metro New York. The county, now with some 847 affordable units in the pipeline, has surpassed the required 750 units in communities where minorities make up a small percentage of the population."

Comments

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Andrew,
Here is a short video of “Doug French’s legacy” It was a very sad time in Rye history.

Unfortunately the current Cohen admiration seems to be heading down the same path judging by the last few city council meetings. Once again we currently have a Mayor limiting how long residents can speak because the topic of conversation displays his refusal to protect the health and safety of the public. That’s how French started his spiral downhill.

“In a note to local press...” I’ve never seen a bigger narccisst than former Mayor Doug French. Every piece that guy pens for the Rye Record is about how great he was as mayor. His portrait unveiling ceremony was almost all self praise. It was nauseating to listen to him talk about himself, especially when you consider the numerous scandals our city endured while he was in office. Now, in an attempt to stay relevant, Doug is emailing the media trying to re-write history. Self praise is the first sign of insecurity, Doug. Your contributions towards this project were minimal. At your last meeting ever, the council declared itself lead agency for the proposed zoning change. The actual work began after you left office— the site visits, public hearings, the vetting process and oversight of the construction. Decisions of size, scale, number of units etc. Not sure what you believe you actually did here.